Saturday, May 27, 2006

Quote of the Week


I have collected quotes since I was in the 8th grade and was fascinated by the sayings of politicians and sports figures. I probably have 60 pages or more of quotations saved in a Word document now. I'm thinking I might try posting a Quote of the Week here.

Last week, Calvin Mackie, an engineering professor at Tulane University, spoke at the Pacific Northwest Association for College Admission Counseling conference in Salem, Oregon. Afterwards, he gave me a copy of his book and I was glancing through it the other night. At the beginning of chapter five, the following quote caught my eye:

“The greatest tragedy in life is public success and private failure.”
- Nathaniel Bronner

Thursday, May 25, 2006

On Losing a Son

In April, one of my colleagues posted the following essay to the NACAC e-list. Even though I'm still a few years away -- gee, can it be just three years? -- from losing Jordan and then Phillip, it hit me hard. It's good ready and a worthwhile reminder . . .

I guess I have to say that I still have great memories of playing basketball in the driveway with my dad, playing our own invented game of baseball in the front yard using my Pitch Back, going to Oakland A's games and driving across the San Francisco Bay Bridge on the way to his work.

On Losing a Son (to College)
from Bill Bryson’s book I’m a Stranger Here Myself, 1999

This may get a little sentimental, and I’m sorry, but yesterday evening I was working at my desk when my youngest child came up to me, a baseball bat perched on his shoulder and a cap on his head, and asked me if I felt like playing a little ball with him. I was trying to get some important work done before going away on a long trip, and I very nearly declined with regrets, but then it occurred to me that never again would he be seven years, one month, and six days old, so we had better catch these moments while we can.

So we went out onto the front lawn and here is where it gets sentimental. There was a kind of beauty about the experience so elemental and wonderful I cannot tell you – the way the evening sun fell across the lawn, the earnest eagerness of his young stance, the fact that we were doing this most quintessentially dad-and-son thing, the supreme contentment of just being together – and I couldn’t believe that it would ever have occurred to me that finishing an article or writing a book or doing anything at all could be more important and rewarding than this.

Now what has brought on all this sudden sensitivity is that a week or so ago we took our eldest son off to a small university in Ohio. He was the first of our four to fly the coop, and now he is gone – grown up, independent, far away – and I am suddenly realizing how quickly they go.
“Once they leave for college they never really come back,” a neighbor who has lost two of her own in this way told us wistfully the other day.

This isn’t what I wanted to hear. I wanted to hear that they come back a lot, only this time they hang up their clothes, admire you for your intelligence and wit, and no longer have a hankering to sink diamond studs into various odd holes in their heads. But the neighbor was right. He is gone. There is an emptiness in the house that proves it.

I hadn’t expected it to be like this because for the past couple of years even when he was here he wasn’t really here, if you see what I mean. Like most teenagers, he didn’t live in our house in any meaningful sense – more just dropped by a couple of times a day to see what was in the refrigerator or to wander between rooms, a towel round his waist, calling out “Mom, where’s my . . .?” as in “Mom, where’s my yellow shirt?” and “Mom, where’s my deodorant?”

Occasionally I would see the top of his head in an easy chair in front of a television on which Asian people were kicking each other in the heads, but mostly he resided in a place called “Out.”
My role in getting him off to college was simply to write checks – lots and lots of them – and to look suitably pale and aghast as the sums mounted. I was staggered at the cost of sending a child to college these days. Perhaps it is because we live in a community where these matters are treated earnestly, but nearly every college-bound youth in our town goes off and looks at half a dozen or more prospective universities at enormous cost. Then there are fees for college entrance examinations and a separate fee for each university applied to.

But all this pales beside the cost of college itself. My son’s tuition is $19,000 a year, which I am told is actually quite reasonable these days. Some schools charge as much as $28,000 for tuition. Then there is a fee of $3,000 a year for his room, $2,400 for food, $700 or so for books, $650 for health center fees and insurance, and $710 for “activities.” Don’t ask me what that is. I just sign the checks.

Still to come are the costs of flying him to and from Ohio at Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter, plus all the other incidental expenses like spending money and long-distance phone bills. Already my wife is calling him every other day to ask if he has enough money, when in fact, as I point out, it should be the other way around. And here’s one more thing. Next year, I have a daughter who goes off to college, so I get to do this twice.

So you will excuse me, I hope, when I tell you that the emotional side of this event was rather overshadowed by the ongoing financial shock. It wasn’t until we dropped him at his university dormitory and left him there looking touchingly lost and bewildered amid an assortment of cardboard boxes and suitcases in a spartan room not unlike a prison cell that it really hit home that he was vanishing out of our lives and into his own.

Now that we are home it is even worse. There is no kick-boxing on the TV, no astounding clutter of sneakers in the back hallway, no calls of “Mom, where’s my . . .?” from the top of the stairs, no one my size to call me a “doofus” or to say, “Nice shirt, Dad. Did you mug a boat person?” In fact, I see now, I had it exactly wrong. Even when he wasn’t here, he was here, if you see what I mean. And now he is not here at all.

It takes only the simplest things – a wadded-up sweatshirt found behind the backseat of the car, some used chewing gum left in a patently inappropriate place – to make me want to blubber helplessly. Mrs. Bryson, meanwhile, doesn’t need any kind of prod. She just blubbers helplessly.

For the past week I have found myself spending a lot of time wandering aimlessly through the house looking at the oddest things – a basketball, his running trophies, an old holiday snapshot – and thinking about all the carelessly discarded yesterdays they represent. The hard and unexpected part is the realization not just that my son is not here but that the boy he was is gone forever. I would give anything to have them both back. But of course that cannot be. Life moves on. Kids grow up and move away, and if you don’t know this already, believe me, it happens faster than you can imagine.

Which is why, if you will excuse me, I am going to finish here and go off and play a little baseball on the front lawn while the chance is still there.

Our Pearl of Great Value



On May 14, Mother's Day, our church (United Evangelical Free Church) offered a "baby dedication" during the morning service. There were five families who took part and the pastor asks each one to prepare and read a dedication statement and then he prays for each child and family one at a time. It was kind of neat. The following is an excerpt from the statement we read to the church.


Matthew 13:44-45 says, “The kingdom of heaven is like a treasure hidden in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field. The kingdom of heaven is like a merchant looking for fine pearls. When he found one of great value, he went away and sold everything he had and bought it.”

About a year and a half ago, we learned about a treasure hidden far away in the land of China and, with the help of many friends and family members, we began the process of securing this pearl of great value, a little girl we decided to name MelodyJoy Marie Muntz.

One of our motivations for adopting a daughter from China was the thought that this little girl might never hear the Gospel unless we entered her life. We’re here on this Mother’s Day to publicly dedicate ourselves, with your help, to guiding her in the path of righteousness, hoping that she will someday choose to be adopted again, this time into the family of God.

Snakes on Planes, Friends at Airports

Okay, we’ve been home for seven weeks and still I haven’t written about the trip home from China. Let’s just say that while everything has been amazingly well since we got home, it’s been a bit of shock to adjust back to work, home, conference planning, the boys and, oh yes, having a one-year-old in the house.

For the sake of getting this over, let me just dive in and see what I still remember of those 24 hours. Getting ready to leave for the airport was made a bit more complicated by the fact that the hotel had shut off all water from 1:00 to 5:00 AM but we survived. I was a little irritated that our guides were making us get up so early and we got to the airport well ahead of schedule. There, we had the misfortune of having our bags chosen for a random search. Every single item in our three big suitcases was taken out and everything that was, for instance, wrapped in newspaper for safekeeping was unwrapped. Of course, when they repacked the suitcases, it wasn’t done with quite the same amount of care that Jeannette had exercised the night before.

Other than being a bit irritated, everything was still fine. We had to argue with the clerk at the counter about a bag that was supposedly overweight and then we misunderstood the directions to our gate but we finally found the right security clearance area. Time was getting a little short but we were still fine. Then the drama began . . .

Jameson had bought a wooden, toy snake in Guangzhou and one of the security guys decided that it couldn’t be taken on the plane. Okay, I’ve been up since five o’clock and they just ransacked everything in our bags and my son has tears in his eyes because some idiot thinks a toy snake shouldn’t be on board. Without going into details, I decided that they were not going to get his toy. (At one point, as Jameson tried to fight back the tears, I whispered, “Go ahead and cry. Let them see you cry.”) To cut to the chase, Jeannette worked out a compromise that involved emptying most of the things out of her carry-on, throwing the snake in and checking the bag planeside.

(When we got back to the States, we saw an ad for a horror flick being released called “Snakes on Planes,” about someone releasing a bunch of dangerous snakes on a flight. Go figure.)

The flights themselves were a bit trying for Jeannette as it was hard to help Melody be comfortable (and we had the misfortune to be flying with Northwest Airlines’ LPFA . . . Least Personable Flight Attendant).

Upon landing in Portland, MelodyJoy became an official US citizen! We made our way to the Rose City CafĂ© in the airport and my parents, Laura’s husband and our friend Ellen Zarfas were waiting for us there. Later, when the Lymans arrived on a later flight from China, we were joined by some of their family and the Morgans, who had driven up from Klamath Falls to greet them. It was nice to see everyone and feel like our super-long layover at PDX was productive. We were so exhausted, though! Jameson and I had not slept at all on the two flights from China and he just collapsed in the restaurant and conked out. All four of us were the Walking Dead!

In the afternoon, we got on the little jet to Klamath Falls. We knew some folks would be waiting for us at our airport’s one and only gate but were stunned to see not just a few but dozens of people waiting for us! There were neighbors, friends from church, my staff from OIT, Jordan and Phillip . . . balloons, signs and smiles. It was awesome! When we got home, we found flowers and some friends had prepared meals for us.

I don’t know how we could have done all of this without such great support from friends and family. It’s been challenging enough anyway! We have been truly blessed.